format code according to conventions [skip ci]

master
QMK Bot 2020-01-24 02:15:29 +00:00
parent d13ada1162
commit fe50883c15
3 changed files with 3 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -21,5 +21,5 @@
*/
#ifndef TRANSIENT_EEPROM_SIZE
# include "eeconfig.h"
# define TRANSIENT_EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE+3)/4)*4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
# define TRANSIENT_EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE + 3) / 4) * 4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
#endif

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@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
#ifndef EEPROM_SIZE
# include "eeconfig.h"
# define EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE+3)/4)*4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
# define EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE + 3) / 4) * 4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
#endif
__attribute__((aligned(4))) static uint8_t buffer[EEPROM_SIZE];

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@ -61,7 +61,6 @@
Attempts to modify the EEPROM_SIZE setting may brick your board.
*/
// Writing unaligned 16 or 32 bit data is handled automatically when
// this is defined, but at a cost of extra code size. Without this,
// any unaligned write will cause a hard fault exception! If you're
@ -529,7 +528,7 @@ void eeprom_write_block(const void *buf, void *addr, uint32_t len) {
# ifndef EEPROM_SIZE
# include "eeconfig.h"
# define EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE+3)/4)*4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
# define EEPROM_SIZE (((EECONFIG_SIZE + 3) / 4) * 4) // based off eeconfig's current usage, aligned to 4-byte sizes, to deal with LTO
# endif
__attribute__((aligned(4))) static uint8_t buffer[EEPROM_SIZE];